He's sitting there with one hand holding his head like he's bored but doing the code like a true master. This man shows that muscle and brain memory go hand in hand.
I went to Morse code school while in the service (1982). After seven weeks, I just passed the min requirement of nine words a minute. This guy is a rock star.
I just got into morse. I can write out anything I can read pretty easily. Not very speedy, but I don't get caught up on any characters. But interpreting incoming morse? That's a whole different ballgame. That's going to take insane practice, especially something this speedy.
Я военный связист служил в армии России 1998-2000 по призыву , за 7 недель обучения азбуки Морзе мое подразделение работало на ключе 15 групп в минуту это 75 букв или цифр под столом не видя рук . На гражданке я обычный повар до армии и после .
@@VladimirPorokhin рад, что призыв на военную службу прошел для вас хорошо. К сожалению, я не годен для военной службы здесь, в США, но я медленно изучаю код самостоятельно, хотя входящие сигналы Морзе очень трудно интерпретировать, но чтение и отправка сообщений не слишком сложны. это больше запоминать эти точки и тире и слово, которое они означают как язык.
What an incredible audiobook! The climax was really captivating and the ending made me cry tears of happiness. All the characters were intresting and some were even relatable.
My uncle was a morse code operator in the second word war and worked under great stress he had a breakdown after very long duties sometimes lasting days on end with peoples lives very much on the line after the war he went on to help with the early development of computers happy trails hugh an unsung Scottish hero 🏴
That is an understatement! Morse code of low wattage (5 watts) was able to get through East Germany despite massive USSR jammers (250,000 watts) in most cases! When all else fails… Morse Code and or pigeons!
@@ianseldoon1197 Yes. The first comment for example. If you're uncreative then just don't comment. Better than copy paste and then write: "Edit: Thanks for all the lik..." "No one cares"
I've read that old time telegraph operators sometimes suffered from an overuse affliction called "glass arm." Watching this guy, I can understand how that could happen.
Excellent video! I understand the military stopped teaching morse code...bad decision...it can be used as shown & also in ship-to-ship communications...modern technology is not always available...if I were in the service now, I'd try to learn it on my own...😊
I saw a clip from some TV talk show or other featuring a pair of these guys and a pair of teenagers with cell phones. One guy on each team was given a sheet of paper with a short paragraph on it, and their assignment was to transmit (CW or SMS) as quickly as possible to their opposite numbers. They could transmit whatever they wanted, but when they were done their partners had to quote the paragraph with word-for-word accuracy. The CW guys were done before the teenagers were even halfway finished, and they got the paragraph right while the teenagers made two or three mistakes. I'm currently learning Morse code (why I found this video), and it could be that the hardest thing about it is going to turn out to be all the abbreviations. When CW guys are just ragchewing on the bands, almost every word is abbreviated somehow, and some of those abbreviations are...not obvious, shall we say.
Cool! This was at the World Championship in High Speed Telegraphy in 2011 in Germany. The operator in the video is from a Belarusian team. He is just doing this demonstration for the camera though, using materials from an earlier 2007 national event in Belarus. That's why the title on the sheet at 1:00 is in Cyrillic.
@@iffysweatshirt2675 You can google search the Mors alphabet , then slow down the video and listen if he is saying real words :X SEEMS INTERESTING IN CARANTINE
This gave me an idea on cheating in tests tho im not gonna do it cause i want to learn tho if you have friends that know morse code also you can tell answers by using your pen
@@jaelencalma8794 Yeah,all you have to do is learn morse code before the exam instead of studying and spend a few (like,and 20) minutes decoding the pen clicks while being supervised by the teacher, while the teacher yells at your friend for clicking the pen instead of writing on the test
God bless this old man, may god treat him soon. My passing grandfather also struggled with Parkinson’s disease, he was such a loving person😭😭😭 R.I.P my great hero
SOS should be the most basic morse code that everyone should know.. i think its " ... " " . . " " ... " and obviously, we should know this for emergency situation coz its an SOS
*Top 10 rappers Eminem is too afraid to diss* Edit: ok guys, i have to admit something. This whole thing was just an experiment. When i posted this comment, i liked it multiple times from different accounts. RU-vid algorithm thought that comment must be really good because it got 10 likes in like 5 minutes, so it became one of top comments. Later, i removed all 10 likes from my devices, but comment continued to grow. It stopped 12 hours later, and since then it grows really slowly. If you wondered why this got 3.5 k likes in 12 hours, you now know. I really don't care about likes, i just wanted to test youtube algorithm, and i managed to break it. If you want, remove your like from this comment, it would be interesting to see what would happen to the comment. Thanks for listening to my talk
@@TheAdamie no, it is two generations before boomers, the greatest generation. My grandpa was born in 1942 which is a silent generation (one generation before boomers) and was in the army and never used a telegram before. It was used last in WWII which was the time of the greatest generation in action
Quit the comparison of generations, every generation is great in its own way so stop the juvenoia for the previous gen and respect the former for the new gen